Donald Trump's White House confused Theresa May with a 1990s glamour model

The Hill's Reid Wilson said White House briefing on Theresa May's US visit got her name wrong repeatedly.

Related: Jeremy Corbyn called on Theresa May on 26 January 2017 to be 'very blunt' when meeting Donald TrumpITN

If you're going to have a "special relationship" with someone, you should probably get their name right.

The Hill's national correspondent Reid Wilson pointed out that in the White House's daily guidance for upcoming events, the biggest of which was British Prime Minister Theresa May's visit to the US to meet Donald Trump, officials got her name wrong. Three times.

The typos occurred in a running order for their meeting in Washington, DC on 27 January, in which her name was listed as "Teresa May". Teresa May is actually a 1990s glamour model who starred in The Prodigy's video for Smack My Bitch Up.

May is the first foreign leader to meet President Trump since he was sworn in last week (20 January). She is seeking to lay the groundwork for a US-UK trade deal once Britain leaves the EU.

Trump has referred to May as "my Maggie", a reference to the strong Cold War relationship in the 1980s between then-British prime minister Margaret Thatcher and US president Ronald Reagan.

But as Julie Lenarz, executive director of the Human Security Centre think tank, put it in a column for IBTimes UK:

May would be foolish to play Russian Roulette with our security and put the UK's relationship with Europe at risk by too closely aligning herself with an administration that has made no secret of its disparaging views of Nato, the military pact that has largely guaranteed peace in Europe since the end of the Second World War

It is through our actions over many years, working together to defeat evil or to open up the world, that we have been able to fulfill the promise of those who first spoke of the special nature of the relationship between us. The promise of freedom, liberty and the rights of man. So as we rediscover our confidence together – as you renew your nation just as we renew ours – we have the opportunity – indeed the responsibility – to renew the special relationship for this new age. We have the opportunity to lead, together, again